Pluto's radius is about 1150 km (less than one-fifth the size of Earth)
Its surface area is about 1.665 ×107 km² (only about 3% of Earth's).
Volume - 7.15×109 km3 ( 0.0066 Earths)
Mass - 1.305 x 1022 kg ( 0.0021 Earths)
Compared to Earth's Moon, Pluto and Charon (its co-orbiting moon) are both smaller : Pluto about 2/3 of the Moon's diameter and Charon only 1/3.
Distance from the Sun:
5,906,380,000 km
Equatorial Radius:
1,151 km
Volume:
6,390,000,000 km3
Mass:
13,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kg
the diameter is 2,296 km, which means Mercury is 2.18 times wider, Venus is 5.27 times wider, earth is 5.55 times wider, Mars is 2.94 times wider, Jupiter is 62.5 times wider, Saturn is 52 times wider without the rings, Uranus is 22.3 times wider, and neptune is 21.5 times wider.
Pluto has an estimated:
smaller than earths moon..
i suggest googling Pluto or in the spirit of this website go to wikipedia and type in Pluto..
the answer is there.
Its radius is about 1153km, around 18% of earths diameter.
In terms of volume, it is 6.39×109 km3 or 0.0059 Earths
The diameter of Pluto is 2374 km (or 1,475 miles).
No. Binoculars, having relatively small lenses, do not gather enough light for you to see something as faint as Pluto. However, you can see Pluto with a large amateur telescope.
Pluto
Pluto, according to novanet. Yes, but Pluto is not defined as a planet now, of course.
Mercury has a diameter of 2,439.7 km Pluto has a diameter of 2,306 So that means that Mercury is a little bigger
Pluto is no longer a planet (though it is now a dwarf planet) because :It wasn't big enough to be considered a planet (less massive than Eris)Pluto's orbit was inclined too much from the ecliptic and has a large eccentricityPluto is a member of the Kuiper belt
Pluto does have gravity but it is very low. Pluto is a large object that was first discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh.
Only if you have access to a large telescope. Pluto is too small and too far away to be seen with the naked eye.
Pluto is because it is small ,and its not a gas giant like the other four large planets.
Pluto is actually a large asteroid that has been captured in the sun's gravitational pull.
A planet is a large body of rock or gases. Even though Pluto looks small, it isn't. In fact, Pluto is 1,500 miles across. Pluto is made out of frozen gases.
No, that would be pluto
Megachile pluto, also known as Wallace's giant bee, is a very large Indonesian resin bee.
In order to be considered a planet, Pluto would have to clear its orbital path of debris. Pluto is not large enough to do this, so it was reclassified as a dwarf planet.
No. Binoculars, having relatively small lenses, do not gather enough light for you to see something as faint as Pluto. However, you can see Pluto with a large amateur telescope.
Pluto
Pluto is certainly large enough to put many space ships on it. Were we able to get there.
Pluto, according to novanet. Yes, but Pluto is not defined as a planet now, of course.